1.The Twelfth Amendment: “[N]o person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the
United States.”

2.The Twenty-Second Amendment: “No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice ….”

3.Article II, § 1, cl. 4: “No person except a natural born citizen, or a citizen of the United States, at the time of the adoption of this
Constitution, shall be eligible to the office of President; neither shall any person be eligible to that office who shall not have attained to the age
of thirty five years, and been fourteen Years a resident within the United States.”

I thought it was interesting, but from my personal interpretation this means that the biggest obstacle would be that they need hold residency in
separate states.

That said I doubt she'd do it. If she wants votes for him she'd say he's gonna advise her and perhaps say that they'd made many policy decisions
together, thus freeing the VP up for a fluffer. Of I recall she's specifically stated on numerous occasions that he will not be advising her too
closely, and that we should consider her as her own person, not another term for him. (...and I know I for one would see it as another term for him
if she did choose him as vp...)

Hell, they let Ted Cruz run as long as he did. Foreign born to only one 'Merican parent...he passed for white and didn't have a funny sounding name,
though, so he got a pass from the same folks that thought a half black kid born in Hawaii to a mother from Kansas was ineligible.

Nothing is impossible anymore. Wouldn't surprise me in the least if they tried some way ala Cruz to circumvent the system and make it seem okay.

Bill Clinton is probably not looking forward to living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. That's where he lived when he became the 2nd President in U.S.
history to be Impeached. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder emotions could flare up.

Ay, but the devil's in the details. One might argue that the qualifications of the president are outlined in the third bullet point above and that
the limitation on serving more then two terms as president, is not itself a qualification and thus wouldn't be applicable to the position of vice
president. Ultimately that would fall to the supreme court to rule on. Considering how many justices our next president may end up choosing, their
conclusion isn't necessarily cemented against her. Ultimately semantics, but at times semantics matter.

Personally I accept that it can be read either way and thus I choose to keep an open mind as to how others might interpret it.

This is ridiculous, Bill would be the First Lady if she won. Hillary would have Caitlyn Jenner come over for a serious talk with ole Slick WIlly. Her
Monica revenge would be complete when Bill is running around in high heels.

Hillary, once nominated, could not nominate Bill as her VP candidate. If elected, she could not appoint Bill to any other official position (cabinet
official, ambassador, Supreme Court justice, etc.), either. The Federal Anti-Nepotism
Statute, which was passed in 1967, prevents a president from appointing family members to official positions.

If Hillary were to be elected, he would probably serve in an unofficial advisory capacity, much the way Hillary did to Bill during his administration,
when she headed up such projects as the 1993 Health Security Act. Although she was heavily involved in dealing with a major piece of proposed
legislation, this was not an official position within the administration, in so much as she did not draw a paycheck for her work.

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